RPD Chief Stella Patterson revealed on Wednesday that the department is trying to fill 100 vacant positions. The Raleigh police union calls the shortage "astonishing." And residents who spoke to ABC11 say they're feeling the negative effects.
"Someone's life could have been at risk," said Trey Murray, a north Raleigh resident. He doesn't remember hearing the sound of gunshots that night on Sept. 19. But hearing that it took Raleigh police officers 90 minutes to respond to the 911 call about it came as no shock.
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"It doesn't surprise me at all. I've lived here three to five years. There's a lot of incidents that have taken place in this neighborhood. It has been a while for (police) to come out and respond to our calls," he said.
A tipster with inside knowledge of the city's first response system told ABC11 that on Sept. 19 between 2 a.m. and 3 a.m., there were no available officers; and when the 911 call came about shots fired on Pine Ridge Place, it took an hour and a half for an officer to arrive.
Patricia Rocker has lived here in a north Raleigh condo on Pine Ridge Place for 2 1/2 years. She said she has called 911 more than once about the sound of gunshots. She knows the wait time well.
"I'm just not sure where the gunshots were coming from," she said. "It usually would take over an hour, one to two hours for police to respond. Absolutely, too long"
Raleigh Police Protective Association Vice-President Rick Armstrong said the incident was "Just unacceptable. I don't think anyone should wait 90 minutes for a police officer when they hear gunshots."
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Armstrong spoke to ABC11 hours after Patterson laid out the staffing challenges facing RPD.
"The police department is over 100 officers short right now," she said in a news conference regarding the city's quarterly crime statistics.
The 100 vacancies in an 800-officer department are more than a 10% vacancy rate.
"It's a huge problem. It's a huge problem within the police department. It's a huge problem within the community because the citizens are the ones that suffer," Armstrong said. "And the officers suffer also because of the lack of officers on the street."
About that night in September and the long wait time on Pine Ridge Place, an RPD spokesperson said that despite a call log that showed no available beat officers, RPD could have dispatched police from other departments if it had to. Armstrong said fixing the shortage should be the city's No. 1 priority.